Others have remarked on the resemblance to Google’s map pins and wondered if it is all a marketing ploy.

The consensus seems to be that the large wood posts, topped with red cellophane, painted with #moments for ready-made viral ID on the Internet, are some sort of an urban art installation.

“I took it as art. I looked around when I first saw them, thinking whoever made it, he or she might be around, watching how people reacted to it,” said Laila Derakhshanian, an art director and photographer from West Hollywood. She said she took a lot of photos, some of which ended up on Instagram.

No one has claimed responsibility for what most commenters in the twittersphere and Instagram streams have deemed guerilla art. Plus, it's fun.

"My partner and I started seeing them at Runyon Canyon while hiking," said Jared Blackard. "We kind of made a game of it to find the matches."

They even tracked some down that they saw on Instagram to take their own pictures with the matches. Blackard says he's seen them come and go from different locations and thinks they're being curated by an artist.

"We think it's something along those lines," he said. "They are all hand made and put together."

Others say the #moments message is inspiring.

"For me it means, 'Life is about moments,'" wrote Babbs Kaplinsky in an email. She viewed a trio of them along a Runyon Canyon trail. "Enjoy every moment."

Published at 5:39 PM PDT on May 30, 2014 | Updated at 5:23 PM PDT on May 31, 2014